Zitat des Tages von James Levine:
I can imagine wanting to work with this ensemble and this company always.
I have a big problem with conductors who gesture a lot.
A lot of people get impatient with the pace of change.
Most people treat the office manual the way they treat a software manual. They never look at it.
So, the total number of hours spent on the stuff you have to do to take care of a family, working and caring for stuff at home, the total number of hours is actually about the same for mothers and fathers.
I thought I'd write one book and the world would change overnight.
When they are performing in front of the public, they ought to have a sensation that's relatively easy, if the technical and the interpretive work was done before.
More and more couples are having this negotiation or discussion, but I'm still amazed at the number who aren't and where the cultural norm sort of kicks in and they just assume that mom's got to be the one who stays home, not dad.
They've really got to recognize that all of us bring some of our family issues to work and our work home.
It was just that we had this phenomenal honeymoon relationship that just kept on going.
If you factor in not just who's doing what at home, but how much more time working fathers are spending on work outside the home, on average they spend two hours more per day outside the home.
Second, if you're the boss, just because they don't ask doesn't mean your employees don't have needs.
There is no relationship between the gestures and what an orchestra will do.
We found that when people put this issue on the table, it turns out that men acknowledge the issue, and employers and employees can work out solutions just as working mothers do.
Great cataclysmic things can go by and neither the orchestra nor the conductor are under the delusion that whether they make this or that gesture is going to be the deciding factor in how it comes out.
But the important thing is to lie down and fall asleep. That little nap means you wake up fresh again and can continue.
You try on purpose to get players with different qualities which will rub off on one another.
I think this orchestra's strengths involve drama and voice.
My hunch is that probably men are doing more both outside the home and inside the home.
Where my tastes in music are concerned, I'm a real maximalist.
It's just that, when the orchestra look at me, I want them to see a completely involved person who reflects what we rehearsed, and whose function is to make it possible for them to do it.
Women tend to have recognition and peer group support - recognition from friends and family that this has to be a big issue in their lives. They're more comfortable expressing the need for support and receiving it.
I was lucky that I met the right mentors and teachers at the right moment.
And, over the last thirty years we have seen men's participation in both housework and childcare has increased and women's have stayed at about the same.
Art has never been a popularity contest.
And so, little by little, I gradually divested myself of pretty nearly all of the guest conducting I used to do, because I was at the same time working in the places like the Met, where I could work in this sort of depth.
I grew up in an era where an orchestra was like a treasure chest.
It has to be able to play at the maximum expression and communication in every style, and the only way you can do that is - like Verdi said - working with a file, every day, little by little, until the orchestra's collective qualities emerge.
We do not seem to be finding tomorrow's Toscas.
As major orchestras around the world are gripped in various kinds of crises and upheaval, we need to be sure that we are bringing up this new generation.
Everybody blames the culture without taking responsibility.
It wasn't that I ever knew I'd be at the Met for 20 years, or 30 years, or 40 years, or anything like that.
We're in the midst of an evolution, not a revolution.
At my age, you are naturally inclined towards teaching.